14.3 stat: Report file or file system status

stat displays information about the specified file(s). Synopsis:

stat [option]… [file]…

With no option, stat reports all information about the given files.
But it also can be used to report the information of the file systems the
given files are located on. If the files are links, stat can
also give information about the files the links point to.

Due to shell aliases and built-in stat functions, using an
unadorned stat interactively or in a script may get you
different functionality than that described here. Invoke it via
env (i.e., env stat …) to avoid interference
from the shell.

‘-L’

‘--dereference’

Change how stat treats symbolic links.
With this option, stat acts on the file referenced
by each symbolic link argument.
Without it, stat acts on any symbolic link argument directly.

‘-f’

‘--file-system’

Report information about the file systems where the given files are located
instead of information about the files themselves.
This option implies the -L option.

‘-c’

‘--format=format’

Use format rather than the default format.
format is automatically newline-terminated, so
running a command like the following with two or more file
operands produces a line of output for each operand:

$ stat --format=%d:%i / /usr
2050:2
2057:2

‘--printf=format’

Use format rather than the default format.
Like --format, but interpret backslash escapes,
and do not output a mandatory trailing newline.
If you want a newline, include ‘\n’ in the format.
Here’s how you would use --printf to print the device
and inode numbers of / and /usr:

$ stat --printf='%d:%i\n' / /usr
2050:2
2057:2

‘-t’

‘--terse’

Print the information in terse form, suitable for parsing by other programs.

The output of the following commands are identical and the --format
also identifies the items printed (in fuller form) in the default format.
Note the format string would include another ‘%C’ at the end with an
active SELinux security context.

The ‘%t’ and ‘%T’ formats operate on the st_rdev member of
the stat(2) structure, and are only defined for character and block
special files. On some systems or file types, st_rdev may be used to
represent other quantities.

The ‘%W’, ‘%X’, ‘%Y’, and ‘%Z’ formats accept a
precision preceded by a period to specify the number of digits to
print after the decimal point. For example, ‘%.3X’ outputs the
last access time to millisecond precision. If a period is given but no
precision, stat uses 9 digits, so ‘%.X’ is equivalent to
‘%.9X’. When discarding excess precision, time stamps are truncated
toward minus infinity.

The mount point printed by ‘%m’ is similar to that output
by df, except that:

stat does not dereference symlinks by default
(unless -L is specified)

stat does not search for specified device nodes in the
file system list, instead operating on them directly

stat outputs the alias for a bind mounted file, rather than
the initial mount point of its backing device.
One can recursively call stat until there is no change in output,
to get the current base mount point

When listing file system information (--file-system (-f)),
you must use a different set of format directives:

%a - Free blocks available to non-super-user

%b - Total data blocks in file system

%c - Total file nodes in file system

%d - Free file nodes in file system

%f - Free blocks in file system

%i - File System ID in hex

%l - Maximum length of file names

%n - File name

%s - Block size (for faster transfers)

%S - Fundamental block size (for block counts)

%t - Type in hex

%T - Type in human readable form

Time stamps are listed according to the time zone rules specified by
the TZ environment variable, or by the system default rules if
TZ is not set. See Specifying the Time Zone
with TZ in The GNU C Library Reference Manual.

An exit status of zero indicates success,
and a nonzero value indicates failure.